EP0488649B1 - Überprüfung des Satzzeilenabstandes eines Blattdruckers - Google Patents

Überprüfung des Satzzeilenabstandes eines Blattdruckers Download PDF

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Publication number
EP0488649B1
EP0488649B1 EP91310882A EP91310882A EP0488649B1 EP 0488649 B1 EP0488649 B1 EP 0488649B1 EP 91310882 A EP91310882 A EP 91310882A EP 91310882 A EP91310882 A EP 91310882A EP 0488649 B1 EP0488649 B1 EP 0488649B1
Authority
EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
page
data
line spacing
lines
text
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
EP91310882A
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English (en)
French (fr)
Other versions
EP0488649A3 (en
EP0488649A2 (de
Inventor
Patrick Oscar Bischel
John Knox Brown
Carl Price Cole
Donald George Fitch
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Lexmark International Inc
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Lexmark International Inc
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Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Lexmark International Inc filed Critical Lexmark International Inc
Publication of EP0488649A2 publication Critical patent/EP0488649A2/de
Publication of EP0488649A3 publication Critical patent/EP0488649A3/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of EP0488649B1 publication Critical patent/EP0488649B1/de
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06KGRAPHICAL DATA READING; PRESENTATION OF DATA; RECORD CARRIERS; HANDLING RECORD CARRIERS
    • G06K15/00Arrangements for producing a permanent visual presentation of the output data, e.g. computer output printers
    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06KGRAPHICAL DATA READING; PRESENTATION OF DATA; RECORD CARRIERS; HANDLING RECORD CARRIERS
    • G06K2215/00Arrangements for producing a permanent visual presentation of the output data
    • G06K2215/0002Handling the output data
    • G06K2215/0062Handling the output data combining generic and host data, e.g. filling a raster
    • G06K2215/0065Page or partial page composition
    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06KGRAPHICAL DATA READING; PRESENTATION OF DATA; RECORD CARRIERS; HANDLING RECORD CARRIERS
    • G06K2215/00Arrangements for producing a permanent visual presentation of the output data
    • G06K2215/0002Handling the output data
    • G06K2215/0062Handling the output data combining generic and host data, e.g. filling a raster
    • G06K2215/0071Post-treatment of the composed image, e.g. compression, rotation

Definitions

  • This invention relates to page printing, in which text is defined by data assuming line and page endings and in which the data is used to create a mapped description of the page used by the printer.
  • the page area which can be printed on is divided into small regions arranged in contiguous rows and columns, and each region is treated as a unique picture element or pel.
  • the mapped description has one instruction for each pel location, and the printer prints according to that instruction on the page at the corresponding location.
  • the data may assume more lines for a page than the printer can apply to one page, and this invention is directed to that circumstance.
  • a typical printer to which this invention relates is a laser printer.
  • the mapped description is composed from the text data for an entire page.
  • the mapped description is stored in electronic memory such that one instruction, typically one memory bit, defines a single laser operation for one pel location in the document.
  • a certain number of pels corresponding to adjoining vertical and horizontal positions of printing are employed by each character or symbol in the data, which may be referred to as a character box.
  • the characters and symbols are typically stored as font data for use each time the text data calls for individual characters or symbols. Font data is typically located in the center of a character box, so the typical character box has areas of no print or "white" around its borders.
  • Text data often does not specify the line separation, and the data is composed assuming the line separation to be a standard separation such as that for 6 lines per inch (approximately 2.36 lines per cm). The only other common line separation is that for 8 lines per inch (approximately 3.15 lines per cm).
  • the first line is positioned with the top of the character boxes just at the top of the printable area of the page.
  • the top of the character boxes for the next line is positioned below the top of the character boxes for the first line by a distance equal to the distance of the line separation, and this relationship is repeated for subsequent lines.
  • Information in the character boxes does not overlap, since the line spacing is the same or larger than the height of the character box for 6 lines per inch printing. With such a character box arrangement, for 8 lines per inch line spacing, information in the character boxes does overlap and such overlap is common for 8 lines per inch printing.
  • Some data for a page may define more lines on a page than can be accommodated by the printer. This can occur where inherent limitations of the printer prevent printing on the very top and bottom of a page, as is true for certain printers, since latter printers do print at the very top and bottom. Data written assuming the top to bottom capability of the latter printers may specify two more lines than can be printed by printers which cannot print the top and bottom lines. It is desirable to be able to execute data prepared for such other printers on printers which have some limitation on the area on which they print.
  • a prior solution to printing from data calling for more lines on one page than the printer can normally execute is to revise the code to specify a shorter line spacing.
  • the shorter spacing is determined manually by a person revising the code by dividing the printable page length by the number of lines to be on each page. Usually, the division would produce a remainder, which presumably would be ignored and the result would usually produce a fit on the printable area of the page.
  • the previous line spacing was that for 6 lines per inch with the character box one-six inch in height, which is the same height as a 6 lines per inch line
  • the revised line spacing results in overlap of pel data from adjoining lines. In text such overlap is generally acceptable.
  • a widely sold page printer responds in its primary or "native" mode to a data stream known as Printer Command Language. That language assumes top and bottom margins of three lines, which for standard, eleven inch (approximately 28 cm) letter paper leaves a printable region of 60 full lines when printing at 6 lines per inch. That printer provides for operator selection from its control panel of a line spacing which fits 66 lines into the 60 full line space. The resulting printing is overlapped, since the lines appear as though they had been moved slightly closer together.
  • the electronic description of a page from data for more lines than would normally fit in the printable area of a page is composed by moving all of the lines closer together. In doing so the position of each line is computed and the pel data for adjoining lines are overlapped vertically.
  • the full vertical height of one line is reserved in the computations for determining line spacing, and the line spacing is determined on the basis of the ratio (division) of the remaining printable page length to the number of lines less one. This is automatically done under electronic control and is invariably successful in bringing all of the data to within the printable area.
  • a character box is 50 pels in height, the 50 pels height being exactly that of a 6 lines per inch line interval.
  • the printable page is 64 lines, which is 3200 pels.
  • the computation is 3150 divided by 65, which is 48 with remainder of 30.
  • the page map composition is on the basis of a 48 pels line spacing, with data from both of the overlapping parts of character boxes included in the map composed. (In the line spacing composition, remainders are included in subsequent line-by-line computations, so some of the lines are on a spacing of 49 pels, a refinement shown particularly in the 1986 article cited in the foregoing).
  • the automatic steps taken upon received data include: 1) determining the lines per page for the printing (which in one embodiment is derived from the physical page size times the current default line spacing), 2) determining the page height available for printing (which in one embodiment is a single, stored factor for each page size specified for printing), 3) obtaining a line spacing based on the available length for printing lines less one character box height divided by the lines per page in the text data less 1, and 4) composing a mapped description of the page with line spacing at least closely approximating the results of that division.
  • no pel data is discarded and the data is overlapped by retaining all pel data. Much the same effect would be achieved by not overlapping data since typically little data exists in the overlapping regions.
  • a laser printer 1 receives print data at an input port 3 from a cable 5 connected to a host computer (not shown) as is conventional.
  • the laser printer includes a microprocessor 7 which receives the print data to compose a bit map with one bit corresponding uniquely to each pel location of the printable area of a page to be printed.
  • the microprocessor 7 stores the bit map in random access memory 9, shown illustratively as it is typically a part of a larger memory used with microprocessor 7. Permanent information accessed by the microprocessor 7, such as control instructions, are stored in read only memory 10. Printing is effected under the direction of the content of memory 9, by existing printing mechanisms shown illustratively as print controller 11.
  • Printer 1 has a control panel 13 from which an operator may select various modes of operation of the printer, as well as other instructions, including the physical paper size to be printed upon.
  • top and bottom lines may be composed entirely over each other when the lines exceed the printable lines, as discussed in the foregoing or the lines per page may be reduced and the extra lines printed on subsequent pages.
  • Page sizes to be printed are entered on panel 13 as being one of six common full page sizes or one of six common envelope sizes, and orientation may also be entered. (Orientation describe whether printing is from top to bottom along the long axis, termed “portrait” or from top to bottom along the short axis, termed “landscape”. When not entered, the default is portrait for full pages and landscape for envelopes.) When the line adjustment mode is selected, the number of lines on a page is derived from the physical height of the page size in inches multiplied by the number of current default lines/inch. For example, standard 11 inch long letter pages at six lines per inch results in 66 lines per page.
  • Fig. 2 is illustrative of printing on a page in which the physical page is in portrait orientation and is 13 lines in height at 6 lines per inch. In the line adjustment mode printing will be at 13 lines per page.
  • the printer is assumed to be the laser printer sold by the applicant as the 4019 LaserPrinter.
  • the character box height is 50 pels and is invariable.
  • the total printable page is two lines less than the 13 line physical height or 11 lines, which is 550 pels.
  • the computation is 500 (550 minus 50) divided by 12 (the 13 lines per page minus 1), which yields 41 with remainder of 8.
  • the line spacing from the top of printable area 20 is 41, 42 (since the remainder has totaled 16 and the divisor is 12, twelve are used in adding one pel and the new remainder is 4), 42 (with new remainder zero), 41 (with remainder of eight), 42 (with new remainder 4), 42 (with new remainder zero), and so on repetitively.
  • the bottom line, the 13th line is positioned by line spacing using the foregoing computations as a matter of mechanical convenience. (Alternatively, the last line could be simply positioned at the bottom of the printable area.) However, it is also possible to place the bottom line contiguous to the bottom line of the printable page without regard to the line spacing.
  • Overlapping regions 21 of lines shown in Fig. 2 by parallel lines have an overlap of 9 pels and regions 23 of lines have an overlap of 8 pels.
  • the top region 25 is exactly the one line which the printer is incapable of printing on.
  • the bottom region 27 is the one line which the printer is incapable of printing on plus whatever vertical offset the above described line computations produce for the bottom line of printing.
  • Illustrative text is shown in the top two lines and in the bottom line. Although the overlap brings the text in the subsequent line somewhat closer to the text in the preceding line, no overlap of black from the two lines is necessarily experienced. Normally, when the number of lines specified result in only a few pels of overlap, the text will be separated. Where the text does interfere, often it will only be for ascenders and descenders, such as the descender in the "g" of "good,” which do not significantly obscure the overall text. This invention would not be particularly suitable for either bit mapped graphics (termed all points addressable) or for graphics which is assembled by printing graphics symbols, since graphics symbols often do have important portions which extend to the top and bottom of the character box.
  • the operating sequence conducted electronically by microprocessor 7 is shown in Fig. 3. If the data defines the line spacing, this invention is not normally employed, and in the preferred embodiment data defining line spacing deactivates selection of this mode. When the data does not define the line spacing, the line spacing is defined as the factory default line spacing of 6 lines per inch. The alternative default line spacing of 8 lines per inch is set by code received on port 3. The number of lines per printable page, which is the number of contiguous lines each occupying the full 50 pels character box height, is defined to the microprocessor as a stored value related to the physical page size and orientation selected by the operator at control panel 13. Data for printing is received by microprocessor 7 from port 3.
  • Fig. 3 describes the operation when the line spacing revision mode is operative, shown illustratively by select mode signal 31, which is under control of microprocessor 7 responding to control panel 13 and other signals as will be described.
  • microprocessor 7 determines the lines per page by multiplying the height of current page size entered from the control panel 13 by the number of default lines/inch.
  • microprocessor 7 determines the printable page height by reading the stored value from permanent memory 10 unique to the document and orientation last input from the control panel 13.
  • microprocessor 7 computes the line spacing by subtracting 50 from the height of the printable area and dividing that by the lines per page of data less 1.
  • the mapped page description is composed using results of operation 37. Printing is then conducted on the basis of the description composed in operation 37, indicated by print function 41.
  • the line adjustment mode is deselected, shown as input 43.
  • Microprocessor 7 responds to that new mode being active by using 6 lines per inch as the spacing. Also, in that mode top and bottom margins of 3 full lines are assumed and microprocessor 7 responds to that mode being active by using a printable page length as the defined page length of the physical page specified from control panel 13, or from the data less six lines. The operator may select 66 lines per page from panel 13, which is responded to by microprocessor 7 setting the line spacing to a fixed, predetermined distance which assures that 66 lines will fit in the space of 60 lines.
  • the revised line spacing mode is deselected when the printer is in a mode specific to defining the whole, physical page, sometimes known as the whole page coordinate system.
  • microprocessor 7 responds to all subsequent line spacing commands, including line spacing for graphic data, to override the line revision mode of this invention. Commands in data which set line spacing, known as SIC or set initial conditions commands, cancel the revise line spacing mode, and the mode stays deselected until called for by selection of the mode from control panel 13.

Claims (5)

  1. Kontroller für einen Seitendrucker (1), umfassend eine Einrichtung (7) zum Konvertieren von Textdaten in Bitmap-Daten, wobei die Bitmap-Daten eindeutige Bildpunktinformation für jede Bildpunktposition in einer von dem Drucker bedruckbaren Fläche umfassen, wobei jeder Zeichentyp der Textdaten aus Bildpunktinformation in Zeichenboxen von fester Höhe zusammengesetzt ist und als Fontdaten gespeichert ist, und eine Einrichtung zum Empfangen der Textdaten in einer Form, die Zeilen definiert, wobei eine spezifizierte Anzahl von Zeilen eine zu druckende Textseite bildet, wobei der Kontroller dadurch gekennzeichnet ist, daß er weiter umfaßt:
    eine Einrichtung, um einen revidierten Zeilenabstand S festzusetzen, der kleiner ist als ein Vorgabezeilenabstand, indem der ganzzahlige Wert von S = [H(Fläche)-H(Box)+R]/[L(Seite)-1] verwendet wird, wobei H(Fläche) die Höhe der bedruckbaren Seitenfläche in Bildpunkten ist, H(Box) die Höhe einer Zeichenbox in Bildpunkten ist, L(Seite) die Anzahl von auf der Seite zu druckenden Textzeilen ist und R der Rest in Bildpunkten von irgendeiner vorangehenden Berechnung des Zeilenabstandes S ist,
    wobei die Einrichtung zum Konvertieren die Bitmap-Daten der Textseite erzeugt, wobei einige oder alle Zeilen in einem Abstand auf der Grundlage des revidierten Zeilenabstandes und mit Überlappung der Zeichenboxen angeordnet sind, wobei das Drucken durch den Drucker ansprechend auf die zusammengesetzten Bitmap-Daten erfolgt.
  2. Kontroller nach Anspruch 1, auch umfassend eine erste Modus-Steuereinrichtung, um einen Modus auszuwählen, bei dem die Textdaten zu einer speicherkonformen Beschreibung zusammengesetzt sind, wobei der Zeilenabstand ohne Bezug auf die bedruckbare Seitenfläche definiert ist, und um einen zweiten Modus auszuwählen, bei dem der revidierte Zeilenabstand wie in Anspruch 1 beschrieben zusammengesetzt ist.
  3. Kontroller nach Anspruch 1 oder 2, auch umfassend eine Datenverarbeitungseinrichtung, um die Daten als Zeilenabstandsbefehl zu erkennen und um die Auswahl des Zusammensetzungs-Modus für revidierten Zeilenabstand von Anspruch 1 ansprechend auf die Erkennung des Zeilenabstandsbefehls aufzuheben.
  4. Kontroller nach einem vorangehenden Anspruch, bei dem die Datenverarbeitungseinrichtung die Zeilen pro Seite festsetzt, indem sie die physische Größe der Seite mit dem Vorgabe.zeilenabstand multipliziert.
  5. Seitendrucker, umfassend eine Druckeinrichtung, um auf Papier oder einem anderen Substrat zu drucken, indem potentiell jeder Bildpunkt einer zusammenhängenden Fläche, die eine Seite bildet, gekennzeichnet wird, einen Eingangsanschluß zum Empfangen von Daten, die zu druckende Information definieren, und einen Kontroller, wie in einem vorangehenden Anspruch beansprucht.
EP91310882A 1990-11-26 1991-11-26 Überprüfung des Satzzeilenabstandes eines Blattdruckers Expired - Lifetime EP0488649B1 (de)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US617747 1990-11-26
US07/617,747 US5113488A (en) 1990-11-26 1990-11-26 Page printer composition line spacing revision

Publications (3)

Publication Number Publication Date
EP0488649A2 EP0488649A2 (de) 1992-06-03
EP0488649A3 EP0488649A3 (en) 1993-05-12
EP0488649B1 true EP0488649B1 (de) 1998-08-12

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EP91310882A Expired - Lifetime EP0488649B1 (de) 1990-11-26 1991-11-26 Überprüfung des Satzzeilenabstandes eines Blattdruckers

Country Status (4)

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US (1) US5113488A (de)
EP (1) EP0488649B1 (de)
JP (1) JPH05238094A (de)
DE (1) DE69129974T2 (de)

Families Citing this family (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5390354A (en) * 1991-03-15 1995-02-14 Itt Corporation Computerized directory pagination system and method
JPH05162422A (ja) * 1991-12-13 1993-06-29 Nec Corp 用紙検出装置
US5758039A (en) * 1992-12-25 1998-05-26 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. Small size printer having multiple font sizes
US5528732A (en) * 1994-10-17 1996-06-18 Xerox Corporation Reprographic device for making copies with multi-spaced lines
US5642473A (en) * 1994-10-17 1997-06-24 Xerox Corporation Paper saving reprographic device
US5953733A (en) 1995-06-22 1999-09-14 Cybergraphic Systems Ltd. Electronic publishing system
JP3549343B2 (ja) * 1996-11-15 2004-08-04 株式会社キングジム 文字情報処理装置

Family Cites Families (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4046471A (en) * 1975-11-03 1977-09-06 International Business Machines Corporation Dual mode electrophotographic apparatus having dual function printing beam
JPS60143984A (ja) * 1983-12-29 1985-07-30 Matsushita Electric Ind Co Ltd 電子タイプライタ
JPS60150164A (ja) * 1984-01-18 1985-08-07 Toshiba Corp 文書作成装置
JPH0688427B2 (ja) * 1987-04-15 1994-11-09 キヤノン株式会社 出力装置

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
EP0488649A3 (en) 1993-05-12
EP0488649A2 (de) 1992-06-03
DE69129974T2 (de) 1999-03-25
US5113488A (en) 1992-05-12
DE69129974D1 (de) 1998-09-17
JPH05238094A (ja) 1993-09-17

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